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Fact Sheet
Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Washington, DC
U.S.- Cuba Relations History
The relationship between the United States and Cuba for the last 40
years has been marked by tension and confrontations. The United States
recognized the new Cuban government, headed by Fidel Castro, on January
7, 1959. However, bilateral relations deteriorated rapidly as the
regime expropriated U.S. properties and moved towards adoption of
a one-party Marxist-Leninist system. As a result, the United States
established an embargo on Cuba in October 1960 and broke diplomatic
relations the following January. Tensions between the two governments
peaked during the April 1961 "Bay of Pigs" invasion and
the October 1962 missile crisis.
Cuba established close ties with the Soviet Union and served as a
Soviet surrogate in Africa and several countries in Latin America,
which fueled cold war tensions and kept the bilateral relationship
distant during the 1960s. In the 1970s, during the Nixon administration,
the United States and Cuba began to explore normalizing relations,
but the talks were suspended in 1975 when Cuba launched a large-scale
intervention in Angola. The United States and Cuba did established
interests sections in their respective capitals in September 1977
to facilitate consular relations and provide a venue for dialogue,
and both currently operate under the protection of the Embassy of
Switzerland. Cuban international entanglements in the 1970s, such
as deploying troops to Ethiopia and allowing Soviet forces on the
island, continued to strain bilateral relations.
In the 1980s the focus of friction in U.S.-Cuban relations shifted
to include immigration, as well as Cuba’s international engagements,
when a migration crisis unfolded. In April 1980 an estimated ten thousand
Cubans stormed the Peruvian embassy in Havana seeking political asylum.
Eventually, the Cuban government allowed 125,000 Cubans to illegally
depart for the United States from the port of Mariel, an incident
known as the "Mariel boatlift." A number of criminals and
mentally ill persons were involuntarily included. Quiet efforts to
explore the prospects for improving relations were initiated in 1981-82
under the Reagan administration, but ceased as Cuba continued to intervene
in Latin America. In 1983, the United States and regional allies forced
the withdrawal of the Cuban presence in Grenada.
In 1984, the United States and Cuba negotiated an agreement to resume
normal immigration, interrupted in the wake of the 1980 Mariel boatlift,
and to return to Cuba those persons who had arrived during the boatlift
who were "excludable" under U.S. law. Cuba suspended this
agreement in May 1985 following the U.S. initiation of Radio Marti
broadcasts to the island, but it was reinstated in November 1987.
In March 1990, TV Marti transmissions began to Cuba.
The 1990s witnessed another migration crisis that set back U.S.-Cuban
relations. When demonstrations fueled by food shortages and prolonged
unannounced blackouts erupted in Havana in August 1994, the Cuban
Government responded by allowing some 30,000 Cubans to set sail for
the United States, many in unsafe boats and rafts, which resulted
in a number of deaths at sea. The two countries in September 1994
and May 1995 signed migration accords with the goal of cooperating
to ensure safe, legal, and orderly migration.
On February 24, 1996, further worsening relations, the Cuban military
shot down two U.S. registered civil aircraft in international airspace,
killing three U.S. citizens and one U.S. resident. The unlawful and
unwarranted attack on two unarmed U.S. civilian aircrafts resulted
in the deaths of Armando Alejandre Jr., Carlos Alberto Costa, Mario
M. de la Peña, and Pablo Morales. Immediately after this brutal
act, and in response to this violation of international aviation law,
Congress and former President Clinton passed the Cuban Liberty and
Democratic Solidarity Act, also known as the Libertad Act. The legislation,
among other provisions, codified the U.S. trade embargo into law and
imposed additional sanctions on the Cuban regime.
Present Policy
The fundamental goal of United States policy toward Cuba is to promote
a peaceful transition to a stable, democratic form of government and
respect for human rights. Our policy has two fundamental components:
maintaining pressure on the Cuban Government for change through the
embargo and the Libertad Act while providing humanitarian assistance
to the Cuban people, and working to aid the development of civil society
in the country.
Support for the Cuban people is the central theme of our policy. New
measures will increase this support without strengthening the government.
These measures (broadening remittances, expanding people-to-people
contacts, increasing direct flights, authorizing food sales to independent
entities, and establishing direct mail service) respond to Pope John
Paul II’s call to open up to Cuba.
U.S. policy also pursues a multilateral effort to press for democratic
change by urging our friends and allies to actively promote a democratic
transition and respect for human rights. The U.S Government opposes
consideration of Cuba’s return to the OAS or inclusion in the
Summit of the America’s process until there is a democratic
Cuban government. The U.S. has repeatedly made clear however that
it is prepared to respond reciprocally if the Cuban government initiates
fundamental, systematic democratic change and respect for human rights.
In another area of concern, the U.S. Government monitors the possible
use by narcotraffickers of Cuban airspace and territorial waters for
the transshipment of drugs from South America to the United States.
Additionally, Cuba continues to provide safe haven to fugitives from
the U.S. justice system.
Source: U.S. Department
of State
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